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1BATMAN-ADV 2---------- 3 4Batman advanced is a new approach to wireless networking which 5does no longer operate on the IP basis. Unlike the batman daemon, 6which exchanges information using UDP packets and sets routing 7tables, batman-advanced operates on ISO/OSI Layer 2 only and uses 8and routes (or better: bridges) Ethernet Frames. It emulates a 9virtual network switch of all nodes participating. Therefore all 10nodes appear to be link local, thus all higher operating proto- 11cols won't be affected by any changes within the network. You can 12run almost any protocol above batman advanced, prominent examples 13are: IPv4, IPv6, DHCP, IPX. 14 15Batman advanced was implemented as a Linux kernel driver to re- 16duce the overhead to a minimum. It does not depend on any (other) 17network driver, and can be used on wifi as well as ethernet lan, 18vpn, etc ... (anything with ethernet-style layer 2). 19 20 21CONFIGURATION 22------------- 23 24Load the batman-adv module into your kernel: 25 26# insmod batman-adv.ko 27 28The module is now waiting for activation. You must add some in- 29terfaces on which batman can operate. After loading the module 30batman advanced will scan your systems interfaces to search for 31compatible interfaces. Once found, it will create subfolders in 32the /sys directories of each supported interface, e.g. 33 34# ls /sys/class/net/eth0/batman_adv/ 35# iface_status mesh_iface 36 37If an interface does not have the "batman_adv" subfolder it prob- 38ably is not supported. Not supported interfaces are: loopback, 39non-ethernet and batman's own interfaces. 40 41Note: After the module was loaded it will continuously watch for 42new interfaces to verify the compatibility. There is no need to 43reload the module if you plug your USB wifi adapter into your ma- 44chine after batman advanced was initially loaded. 45 46To activate a given interface simply write "bat0" into its 47"mesh_iface" file inside the batman_adv subfolder: 48 49# echo bat0 > /sys/class/net/eth0/batman_adv/mesh_iface 50 51Repeat this step for all interfaces you wish to add. Now batman 52starts using/broadcasting on this/these interface(s). 53 54By reading the "iface_status" file you can check its status: 55 56# cat /sys/class/net/eth0/batman_adv/iface_status 57# active 58 59To deactivate an interface you have to write "none" into its 60"mesh_iface" file: 61 62# echo none > /sys/class/net/eth0/batman_adv/mesh_iface 63 64 65All mesh wide settings can be found in batman's own interface 66folder: 67 68# ls /sys/class/net/bat0/mesh/ 69# aggregated_ogms gw_bandwidth log_level 70# ap_isolation gw_mode orig_interval 71# bonding gw_sel_class routing_algo 72# bridge_loop_avoidance hop_penalty vis_mode 73# fragmentation 74 75 76There is a special folder for debugging information: 77 78# ls /sys/kernel/debug/batman_adv/bat0/ 79# bla_backbone_table log transtable_global 80# bla_claim_table originators transtable_local 81# gateways socket vis_data 82 83Some of the files contain all sort of status information regard- 84ing the mesh network. For example, you can view the table of 85originators (mesh participants) with: 86 87# cat /sys/kernel/debug/batman_adv/bat0/originators 88 89Other files allow to change batman's behaviour to better fit your 90requirements. For instance, you can check the current originator 91interval (value in milliseconds which determines how often batman 92sends its broadcast packets): 93 94# cat /sys/class/net/bat0/mesh/orig_interval 95# 1000 96 97and also change its value: 98 99# echo 3000 > /sys/class/net/bat0/mesh/orig_interval 100 101In very mobile scenarios, you might want to adjust the originator 102interval to a lower value. This will make the mesh more respon- 103sive to topology changes, but will also increase the overhead. 104 105 106USAGE 107----- 108 109To make use of your newly created mesh, batman advanced provides 110a new interface "bat0" which you should use from this point on. 111All interfaces added to batman advanced are not relevant any 112longer because batman handles them for you. Basically, one "hands 113over" the data by using the batman interface and batman will make 114sure it reaches its destination. 115 116The "bat0" interface can be used like any other regular inter- 117face. It needs an IP address which can be either statically con- 118figured or dynamically (by using DHCP or similar services): 119 120# NodeA: ifconfig bat0 192.168.0.1 121# NodeB: ifconfig bat0 192.168.0.2 122# NodeB: ping 192.168.0.1 123 124Note: In order to avoid problems remove all IP addresses previ- 125ously assigned to interfaces now used by batman advanced, e.g. 126 127# ifconfig eth0 0.0.0.0 128 129 130VISUALIZATION 131------------- 132 133If you want topology visualization, at least one mesh node must 134be configured as VIS-server: 135 136# echo "server" > /sys/class/net/bat0/mesh/vis_mode 137 138Each node is either configured as "server" or as "client" (de- 139fault: "client"). Clients send their topology data to the server 140next to them, and server synchronize with other servers. If there 141is no server configured (default) within the mesh, no topology 142information will be transmitted. With these "synchronizing 143servers", there can be 1 or more vis servers sharing the same (or 144at least very similar) data. 145 146When configured as server, you can get a topology snapshot of 147your mesh: 148 149# cat /sys/kernel/debug/batman_adv/bat0/vis_data 150 151This raw output is intended to be easily parsable and convertable 152with other tools. Have a look at the batctl README if you want a 153vis output in dot or json format for instance and how those out- 154puts could then be visualised in an image. 155 156The raw format consists of comma separated values per entry where 157each entry is giving information about a certain source inter- 158face. Each entry can/has to have the following values: 159-> "mac" - mac address of an originator's source interface 160 (each line begins with it) 161-> "TQ mac value" - src mac's link quality towards mac address 162 of a neighbor originator's interface which 163 is being used for routing 164-> "TT mac" - TT announced by source mac 165-> "PRIMARY" - this is a primary interface 166-> "SEC mac" - secondary mac address of source 167 (requires preceding PRIMARY) 168 169The TQ value has a range from 4 to 255 with 255 being the best. 170The TT entries are showing which hosts are connected to the mesh 171via bat0 or being bridged into the mesh network. The PRIMARY/SEC 172values are only applied on primary interfaces 173 174 175LOGGING/DEBUGGING 176----------------- 177 178All error messages, warnings and information messages are sent to 179the kernel log. Depending on your operating system distribution 180this can be read in one of a number of ways. Try using the com- 181mands: dmesg, logread, or looking in the files /var/log/kern.log 182or /var/log/syslog. All batman-adv messages are prefixed with 183"batman-adv:" So to see just these messages try 184 185# dmesg | grep batman-adv 186 187When investigating problems with your mesh network it is some- 188times necessary to see more detail debug messages. This must be 189enabled when compiling the batman-adv module. When building bat- 190man-adv as part of kernel, use "make menuconfig" and enable the 191option "B.A.T.M.A.N. debugging". 192 193Those additional debug messages can be accessed using a special 194file in debugfs 195 196# cat /sys/kernel/debug/batman_adv/bat0/log 197 198The additional debug output is by default disabled. It can be en- 199abled during run time. Following log_levels are defined: 200 2010 - All debug output disabled 2021 - Enable messages related to routing / flooding / broadcasting 2032 - Enable messages related to route added / changed / deleted 2044 - Enable messages related to translation table operations 2058 - Enable messages related to bridge loop avoidance 20615 - enable all messages 207 208The debug output can be changed at runtime using the file 209/sys/class/net/bat0/mesh/log_level. e.g. 210 211# echo 6 > /sys/class/net/bat0/mesh/log_level 212 213will enable debug messages for when routes change. 214 215Counters for different types of packets entering and leaving the 216batman-adv module are available through ethtool: 217 218# ethtool --statistics bat0 219 220 221BATCTL 222------ 223 224As batman advanced operates on layer 2 all hosts participating in 225the virtual switch are completely transparent for all protocols 226above layer 2. Therefore the common diagnosis tools do not work 227as expected. To overcome these problems batctl was created. At 228the moment the batctl contains ping, traceroute, tcpdump and 229interfaces to the kernel module settings. 230 231For more information, please see the manpage (man batctl). 232 233batctl is available on http://www.open-mesh.org/ 234 235 236CONTACT 237------- 238 239Please send us comments, experiences, questions, anything :) 240 241IRC: #batman on irc.freenode.org 242Mailing-list: b.a.t.m.a.n@open-mesh.org (optional subscription 243 at https://lists.open-mesh.org/mm/listinfo/b.a.t.m.a.n) 244 245You can also contact the Authors: 246 247Marek Lindner <lindner_marek@yahoo.de> 248Simon Wunderlich <siwu@hrz.tu-chemnitz.de>